Wednesday 3 July 2013

Czech ANPR Systems

Czech ANPR Systems

The titanHz Czech ANPR Systems (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) is a policing tool which reads Czech vehicle number plates and checks them against various computer databases, such as the Police National Computer (PNC) and the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA). Most criminals rely on vehicles to committ crime. Czech ANPR Systems (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) is designed to make it much more difficult for criminals to use vehicles without being detected. ANPR Systems (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) cameras are located in mobile police vans, in Roads Policing patrol cars, at dedicated fixed sites and via closed-circuit television (CCTV) schemes in urban areas. 

How Czech ANPR Systems works?
The vehicles are passes through an Czech ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) video camera, it takes an image of the number plate. The number plate details are fed into a system which checks them against sources such as the Police National Computer (PNC), Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA), local Force intelligence systems and motor insurers' databases. If the number plate matches one of these sources, the Czech ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) equipment will beep. Vehicles which have sounded an alert will be stopped by police officers for further investigation or to gather intelligence. Read about stop and search in a vehicle. Only vehicles that are highlighted by enforcement agency databases will be stopped. Law-abiding citizens have nothing to fear from Czech ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) operations. Czech ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) identifies suspect vehicles that may not normally attract police attention. Unlicensed or uninsured vehicles are likely to be seized on the spot by Czech ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) equipped officers. It can be used to gather intelligence on known criminals, and for running pro-active operations using dedicated Roads Policing intercept teams. Czech ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) cameras are not 'safety' cameras - they are not used in Thames Valley to catch speeding or otherwise law-abiding motorists. ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) cameras are not used to generate money for the government or other agencies. The use of Czech ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) by Thames Valley Police fully complies with the Data Protection Act 1998 and the Human Rights Act 1998. 'LAPI' alarms are sent in real time to the "CORG" (the gendarmerie operations centre at regional level)in the form of localisation on a map and to the patrol vehicles in the area thanks of the onboard computer. The videos recorded by the vehicle can also be sent to the "CORG" by the onboard computer, to show the regional command vital information about the situation on the ground (for example, acts of delinquencies in a suburb, a major road traffic accident on a motorway or traffic conditions by blizzard). 
High speed number plate recognition of Czech ANPR Systems

Using technology originally developed for character recognition in postal sorting machines, the integrated Czech ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) engine from Siemens attains maximum read rates at vehicle speeds up to 200 km/h. Special algorithms enable the system to accurately recognise number plates from many different countries without manual review, reducing the need for post-processing effort in enforcement solutions. This high performance level is available throughout the day and night with the intelligent infrared illuminator providing optimum illumination of the wide detection zone.
The Czech ANPR Systemss (Automatic Number Plate Recognition Systems) may be used as low-priced add-on software module for the MULTIEYE video recorders or for MULTIEYE-NET. The number plates are stored image conform and compared to the database entries. No separate hardware is necessary for the Czech ANPR Systems (Automatic Number Plate Recognition). The standard version offers the surveillance of 2 lanes; the system can be expanded to monitor up to 8 lanes (depending on recorder performance) and thus represents a low-risk and future-proof investment. The MULTIEYE-ANPR is available in two designs: Traffic and Gate, both support analog as well as IP-cameras. Currently number plates from 125 different countries can be recognized.

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